Monday, September 24, 2012

Will Beach Boys reunion end on a sour note?

From the LA Times:

Even on a day designed to celebrate 50 years of
the signature harmonies of the Beach
Boys, the notoriously fractious group couldn’t avoid striking yet another
discordant note amid all the good vibrations.

A day before band members gathered at the Grammy Museum in Los Angeles to
take in various accolades, singer and lyricist Mike Love caught his fellow band
members by surprise in announcing his decision to resume touring with his
latter-day incarnation of the Beach Boys -- minus creative leader Brian Wilson
or original members Al Jardine and David Marks.

The move by Love, who legally controls the Beach Boys name and who has sued
Wilson and Jardine over various issues throughout the years, raises major
questions about any future for the reunited edition of the quintessential
California band. It's played more than 70 performances this year on four
continents and released a warmly received new studio album for the first time in
more than two decades.

“The 50th anniversary tour was designed to go for a year and then
end,” Love said at the Grammy Museum just after he, Wilson, Jardine, Marks and
Johnston were presented with triple-platinum awards signifying more than 3
million copies sold of their 2003 hits compilation, “Sounds of Summer -- The
Very Best of the Beach Boys.

The framed awards were presented by EMI/Capitol Records executives Bill
Gagnon and Jane Ventom in front of the Grammy Museum’s new Beach Boys exhibit,
“Good Vibrations -- 50 Years of the Beach Boys,” which will run for the next
year. Record label executives would love to keep the reformed band going as the
reunion album, “That’s Why God Made the Radio,” gave the Beach Boys the highest
chart debut in its history when it entered at No. 3 in June with first-week
sales of 61,000 copies.

Love indicated that he’s being protective of the Beach Boys’ legacy.

“You’ve got to be careful not to get overexposed,”
Love said. “There are promoters who are interested [in more shows by the
reunited lineup], but they’ve said, ‘Give it a rest for a year.’ The
Eagles found out the hard way when they went out for a second year and wound
up selling tickets for $5.”

That left other band members confused and disappointed.

“Brian is very bummed,” Wilson’s manager, Jean Sievers, said Tuesday.

Wilson himself said this year’s tour, which includes two final performances
later this week in London, has been “very tiring,” but he added, “I’m really
looking forward to doing another album.”

Love said that he sees recording and touring as separate matters, and that
his decision to return to touring without Wilson, who is his cousin, or Jardine
and Marks, who started the Beach Boys when they were teenagers growing up in
Hawthorne, wouldn’t preclude more recording together. “I’d be interested [in
making another album] if I could write some songs with Brian,” Love said.

The shift in the touring lineup also has caused some confusion outside the
group itself. Texas club Nutty Jerry's had booked a Beach Boys show, which has
since been canceled. Love's manager Jay Jones said it was Love's decision to
halt the show because it was being inaccurately promoted as part of the reunion
tour with the original members.

Nevertheless, group members smiled for photos during the platinum award
presentation and genially answered questions from the museum's executive
director, Robert Santelli, before an enthusiastic crowd of about 200 people,
including a few who flew in from Florida, New Jersey and Kentucky.

Following a Q&A session, a stripped-down version of the touring group
using acoustic instruments performed five songs. The set showcased the
distinctive, multilayered harmonies that propelled hits such as “California
Girls,” “Surfer Girl,” “Help Me Rhonda” and “I Get Around” up the charts in the
1960s.

Wilson has his own group, the Brian Wilson Band, which has been accompanying
him on tour and in the studio since 1999, and with which he has made several new
solo albums. Love and Johnston have continued touring as the Beach Boys with
their own support musicians, two of whom -- guitarist-singer Scott Totten and
drummer John Cowsill -- were part of the 50th anniversary tour, along
with several members of Wilson’s band.

The Grammy Museum exhibit includes various pieces of musical and personal
memorabilia from over a half century of the band’s existence, including the
surfboard once owned by drummer Dennis Wilson, who drowned in 1983. (The third
Wilson sibling, Carl, died in 1998 of cancer.) The surfboard was pictured on the
cover of two Beach Boys albums.

The exhibit also includes a high school theme paper Brian Wilson wrote
outlining “My Philosophy,” in which he stated that he hoped to make his mark in
the world through music. “The satisfaction of ‘a place in the world’ seems well
worth a sincere effort to me,” the 17-year-old future architect of the Beach
Boys sound wrote.

That fucking Mike Love could fuck up a steel ball. What an ass.

More later after I settle down a bit. Keep your tubes hot and your antenna up. See you next time.

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